Editorial Guidelines

Referring to SAS and its products or services

Here is the official description of SAS Institute:SAS is the world's largest privately held software company.

Note: The phrase "privately held" (as opposed to "public") means the company is privately owned and does not sell stock. Visit About SAS Institute for more corporate information about SAS.

Guidelines for using SAS Institute trademarks

We encourage you to use SAS trademarks when you write about SAS products and services. In order to maintain the value of our trademarks, we ask that you adhere to a few simple guidelines. Please refer to this list of SAS Institute Inc. Trademarks. If you have further questions, please email legalweb@sas.com.

Permission to use SAS trademarks does not include permission to use any trademarked SAS logos – including the stylized SAS corporate logo or the tagline THE POWER TO KNOW®. Have your SAS customer representative contact the SAS Corporate Communications Department with any requests to use SAS logos or the tagline THE POWER TO KNOW®.

Do not use a trademark symbol after the word SAS when referring to SAS Institute Inc.

The first time you refer to a SAS registered trademark or trademark (regardless of location, be it in a prominent position or in text), include the appropriate symbol – ® or TM or SM. For example, at the first mention of the product SAS/STAT, include the registered trademark symbol: "We analyzed the data using SAS/STAT® software."

You should use the appropriate trademark symbol whenever a trademarked product or service name appears in a prominent position. By "prominent" we mean bolded or underlined text, larger fonts, titles/captions, and in charts or lists.

Include the SAS trademark notice in a footnote at the bottom of the page or the end of the article. This notice should be used in any collateral where SAS or any of its products or services are mentioned:SAS and all other SAS Institute Inc. product or service names are registered trademarks or trademarks of SAS Institute Inc. in the USA and other countries. ® indicates USA registration.

Note: Never precede a product name or the word SAS with the prefix non-.

Do not use trademarked product names for generic references.

Wrong: Include a Xerox along with the original.Right: Include a photocopy along with the original.

Note: Some trademarks have come into popular usage and have lost their trademark registration. Yo-yo and escalator are examples of this.

Crediting SAS Institute Inc. copyrighted materials

Whenever your document uses materials that are copyrighted by SAS Institute Inc. (including example SAS code or output), you must obtain permission from SAS. All requests for permission to use copyrighted materials – along with a copy of the materials you wish to use, a description of the document you are writing, and an explanation of how it will be published and/or distributed – should be sent to the SAS Publications Division. Once you receive permission, you must include the following footnote in your documents:

Note: The proper citations for SAS publications can be found on the copyright page of the individual work.

Questions regarding the proper formatting of example code or other materials from these publications should be directed to the Technical Editing Department in SAS' Publications Division.

Referencing data analysis performed with SAS® software

Your citation for the data analysis you performed with SAS software should contain the name of the SAS software products used, the version number of the software and copyright date, as well as a statement to indicate ownership of the trademarks. An example citation would be as follows (brackets "[ ]" indicate data that should be supplied by you):

Please note that this information provides the level of detail generally required by scientific journals in order to assure that the data can be replicated. If you are unable to determine exactly which products or version of SAS software was used in your data analysis, and if your publisher has no objection, then SAS would be agreeable to the use of a shorter citation such as: